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There reigned a king of name revered,
To country and to town endeared,
Great Das'aratha, good and sage.
Well read in Scripture's holy page:
Upon his kingdom's weal intent,
Mighty and brave and provident;
The pride of old Ikshváku's seed
For lofty thought and righteous deed.
Peer of the saints, for virtues famed,
For foes subdued and passions tamed:
A rival in his wealth untold
Of Indra and the Lord of Gold.
Like Manu first of kings, he reigned.
And worthily his state maintained,
For firm and just and ever true
Love, duty, gain he kept in view,
And ruled his city rich and free,
Like Indra's Amarávatí.
And worthy of so fair a place
There dwelt a just and happy race
With troops of children blest.
Each man contented sought no more,
Nor longed with envy for the store
By richer friends possessed.
For poverty was there unknown,
And each man counted as his own
Kine, steeds, and gold, and grain.
All dressed in raiment bright and clean,
And every townsman might be seen
With earrings, wreath, or chain.
None deigned to feed on broken fare,
And none was false or stingy there.
A piece of gold, the smallest pay,
Was earned by labour for a day.
On every arm were bracelets worn,
And none was faithless or forsworn,
A braggart or unkind.
None lived upon another's wealth,
None pined with dread or broken health,
Or dark disease of mind.
High-souled were all. The slanderous word,
The boastful lie, were never heard.
Each man was constant to his vows,
And lived devoted to his spouse.
No other love his fancy knew,
And she was tender, kind, and true.
Her dames were fair of form and face,
With charm of wit and gentle grace,
With modest raiment simply neat,
And winning manners soft and sweet.
The twice-born sages, whose delight
Was Scripture's page and holy rite,
Their calm and settled course pursued,
Nor sought the menial multitude.
In many a Scripture each was versed,
And each the flame of worship nursed,
And gave with lavish hand.
Each paid to Heaven the offerings due,
And none was godless or untrue
In all that holy band.
To Bráhmans, as the laws ordain,
The Warrior caste were ever fain
The reverence due to pay;
And these the Vais'yas' peaceful crowd,
Who trade and toil for gain, were proud
To honour and obey;
And all were by the S'údras 1 served,
Who never from their duty swerved,
Their proper worship all addressed
To Bráhman, spirits, God, and guest.
Pure and unmixt their rites remained,
Their race's honour ne'er was stained. 2
Cheered by his grandsons, sons, and wife,
Each passed a long and happy life.
Thus was that famous city held
By one who all his race excelled,
Blest in his gentle reign,
As the whole land aforetime swayed
By Manu, prince of men, obeyed
Her king from main to main.
And heroes kept her, strong and brave,
As lions guard their mountain cave:
Fierce as devouring flame they burned,
And fought till death, but never turned.
Horses had she of noblest breed,
Like Indra's for their form and speed,
From Váhlí's 3 hills and Sindhu's 4 sand,
Vanáyu 5 and Kámboja's land. 6
Her noble elephants had strayed
Through Vindhyan and Himálayan shade,
Gigantic in their bulk and height,
Yet gentle in their matchless might.
They rivalled well the world-spread fame
Of the great stock from which they came,
Of Váman, vast of size,
Of Mahápadma's glorious line,
Thine, Aujan, and, Airávat, thine. 1
Upholders of the skies.
With those, enrolled in fourfold class,
Who all their mighty kin surpass,
Whom men Matangas name,
And Mrigas spotted black and white,
And Bhadras of unwearied might,
And Mandras hard to tame. 2
Thus, worthy of the name she bore, 3
Ayodhyá for a league or more
Cast a bright glory round,
Where Das'aratha wise and great
Governed his fair ancestral state,
With every virtue crowned.
Like Indra in the skies he reigned
In that, good town whose wall contained
High domes and turrets proud,
With gates and arcs of triumph decked,
And sturdy barriers to protect
Her gay and countless crowd.
12:1b The Sataghní, i. e. centicide, or slayer
of a hundred, is generally supposed to be
a sort of fire-arms, or the ancient Indian
rocket; but it is also described as a stone
set round with iron spikes.
12:2b The Nágas (serpents) are demigods
with a human face and serpent body.
They inhabit Pátála or the regions under
the earth. Bhogavatí is the name of
their capital city. Serpents are still worshipped
in India. See Fergusson'a Tree
and Serpent Worship.
13:1 The fourth and lowest pure caste
whose duty was to serve the three first
classes.
13:2 By forbidden marriages between persons
of different castes.
13:3 Váhlí or Váhlika is Bactriana; its
name is preserved in the modern Balkh.
13:4 The Sanskrit word Sindhu is in the
singular the name of the river Indus, in
the plural of the people and territories on
its banks. The name appears as Hidhu
in the cuneiform inscription of Darius son
of Hystaspes, in which the nations tributary
to that king are enumerated.
The Hebrew form is Hodda (Esther, 1. I.)
In Zend it appears as Hendu in a somewhat
wider sense. With the Persians later
the signification of Hind seems to have
co-extended with their increasing acquaintance
with the country. The weak Ionic
dialect omitted the Persian h, and we
find in Hecatæus and Herodotus Indos
and hae Indikae. In this form the Romans
received the names and transmitted them
to us. The Arabian geographers in their
ignorance that Hind and Sind are two
forms of the same word have made of them
two brothers and traced their decent
from Noah. See Lassen's Indische Alterthumskunde
Vol. I. p, 3.
13:5 The situation of Vanáyu is not exactly
determined: it seems to have lain to the
north-west of India.
13:6 Kámboja was probably still further
to the north-west. Lassen thinks that the name is etymologically connected with
Cambyses which in the cuneiform inscription
of Behistun is written Ka(m)bujia.

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1Enakshi Ganguly = ""Amaravathi is the capital of Lord Indra, which was built by the god Viswakarma, the architect of the gods. The capital is said to be 800 miles in circumference and 40 miles high. The pillars of it are composed of diamonds the thrones are of pure gold. Amaravathi is surrounded with gardens and fountains, while music and dancing entertain the celestial inhabitants."Source: http://www.indianetzone.com/28/amaravathi_capital_indra.htm"